Showing posts with label professionalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label professionalism. Show all posts

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Costing a Photography session for your Clients?

Good morning everyone.

Well what a month we have just had. I had a few weddings to shoot this past month and I have to say that the amount of time I spend on shooting for a wedding and the amount of time that I spend editing and delivering images to my client can be quite exhausting, and needless to say very time consuming.

This made me think about the expense that actually goes into costing a particular shoot for a client. Yes, I know we have Blinkbid and a few other tools, I use Quickbooks online to get all my invoicing and banking sorted out. But no matter which application you use it always boils down to how much are you willing to charge your customer so that you can get the job, yet at the same time make enough money to pay for your bills, feed the family, have enough for insurance, buy new equipment, fix old equipment, transport, mortgage, rent, etc... and the list goes on and on.

Now you look at the market place and the guy down the street is charging $59.95 to do a family portrait shoot. What are you going to do? How can you compete with people that are charging such a small amount to get clients? How do you compete in this type of market.

Well, I am talking from experience here when I say this; I am sure you are also gong to be going through similar torments and agony about how to charge your customers. "I cannot survive charging only $59.95 for a portrait session!"

Now take a deep breath and now breath out. You cannot survive in this industry if you try and compete with every single person that is trying to under-cut everyone else in the market. Before you know it you have more expenses than income and you are out of business. This is what I did in the beginning thinking that I could get quite a few clients quickly and make lots of money. It worked for a time but the sad thing was that now I was thought of in the market place as the cheap person and I found myself losing money at every turn.

I had to change my way of thinking. I had to work smarter and charge more to make my business work for me.  I am not saying it will work for everyone, but I make a small profit on every client and I can pay for all my expenses that are generated from a photograph session and I have a little profit over to invest back into my business and save for a rainy day. This is what I did.

Firstly, know what it costs to run your business! I used NPPA calculator to give me a rough idea about what my costs are per year and the amount of shoots that I actually do or would like to do make a living. Here you punch in your expenses for all the tools that you actually use in your business and the amount of days that you have available to shoot or get clients and it gives you


  1. Your total annual expenses
  2. Your weekly cost of doing business
  3. Your overhead cost for each assignment
Number 3 is what I use the most. Just to shoot a 1 hour portrait session tells you the minimum amount you need to charge just to get out of bed. 

As an example, I punched in all my data and as a portrait and wedding photographer I wanted to be booked for 10 months of the year. 2 Months for holidays and vacation off with the family etc.. and then I used 5 days a week for weddings and booking portrait sessions. I think that is fair, but you can change your requirements based on how busy or how little you want to work. At 4 weeks per month and 5 days a week that gives me about 200 days of work. 



Now I used generic figures in the calculator so these are just examples. Remember to put your actual figures to get a more realistic number. So as you can see I have an overhead cost for each day of approximately $448.50 just to break even. 

Now if you take that figure and make your bookings based on these figures you can see that you might need to do 10 1/2 sessions @ $44.50 or you need one big paying client @ $448.50 to cover all your cost of sales. The point here is to actually see the amount of money that is required just to cover your waking up in the morning money.

So for me that would be 2 weddings a month and then quite a few portrait shoots, headshots and any other photography sessions tat I can book.

Well now that you know what your expenses are you can make a more informed decision about how much you need to charge your clients for their sessions.

Here is a quick example. Know what your daily expenses are, would you say that you may be able to realistically do only (5) 1 hour sessions a day? That leaves you with a cost overhead for each session of $89. Therefore the guy down the road running the $59.95 dollar deal has to make sure that he gets at least 10 clients a day just to make a living and make $15.45 profit. 

Now, he has not done any editing yet and I can vouch that he has not costed this into his schedule. So he is working at least 10hrs a day making only $154.50 profit. Do you think this is sustainable. What about editing time, time spent with family, sleeping etc.. I can say that sooner rather than later he is going to be going out of business. I tried this people and it is not sustainable. It sounds good on paper, but when life throws kids, shopping runs, cooking, school and just relaxing time in your path you soon realize that there is not enough time in the day to do everything. So you are going to have to work smarter rather than harder.

How about trying this. Charge $159.95, offer your clients more rather than less. What am I trying to say here. For $59.95 I am sure the client still has to buy their own prints and then they have to pay for shipping and packaging. I realized this early in the game. When clients get more value for money they tend to spend more.

So instead of discounting how about charging more, $159.95, you still have your $44.50 cost but now you add in some prints. I give them 5x7's, two 8x10's a wallet and maybe a (4) 4x6's. This additional cost is approximately $24. Out of this the customer pays for shipping and boutique packaging. (Now I look really professional when I deliver my photographs) so the cost to me is $12. 

Let's break it down:

  • $159.95 1-hour session
  • -$44.50 (cost of doing business)
  • -$12  - additional incentives for charging more
You now land up with a profit of $103.45 for each session. You now have to do just 4.338 sessions per day and you still get your cost covered. This is what I call working smarter. You are offering the client better value for the money that they are spending. You are delivering a better quality product and most importantly you are making an impression building great customer relations.

Yes, it all sounds so easy, but it is not. It took me two years to get to a point where people knew me in my neighborhood. I did my marketing at my kids school, advertising on my car,  a sign outside my house and most importantly, word-of-mouth. I use all the free social media methods and I am constantly talking about my business. Remember the examples above are just that, examples. You have to build a business model that works for you based on your numbers. The business months cover the lean months, like this month and the weddings did for me. I have two months of vacation in December and January when the snow is thick up here in the North East so that has to be taken into consideration.

So in closing I would just like to say. Get a plan in action and don't worry to much about the guy down the street trying to under-cut everyone. Work your plan and your numbers. Stay profitable for every shoot and you will be able to survive in this business.

As always, if you have any questions or want additional information about what I did then please leave a comment below and I will definitely get back to you. 

As we go into the holiday season I wish you all the success and profitability that you deserve.

Denzil


Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Wide-Angle Wednesday in MLA Format

Corina Scoggins
Instructor Jill Mott
Modern Language Association 101
12 February 2014
Wide-Angle Wednesday in MLA Format
            Good day fellow students and faculty! I’m excited to report that here in the Midwest were do to reach above freezing today and by next week we may be in the low seventies. As we thaw out, I look forward to color returning back to the landscape even though that groundhog in Penn State said we would have six more weeks of winter. Today wraps up week five for my current course in Color Theory, in which I’m very proud of what I have come to accomplish and learn from the course. I look forward to the upcoming course in Digital Image Management PH124. To add some color to this blog here is the final composition I submitted for the course Color Theory for Web and Multimedia.


(Scoggins)

            Something you may notice for the blog today is that I’m writing in the format recognized as Modern Language Association or MLA for short. Here at Ai and many other colleges across the nation, writing in MLA format is very common practice. In addition some also use APA, Chicago, and Turabian formats. For this blog I’m only going to cover MLA as this is the writing standard used specifically at Ai. When I started here at Ai, I had no clue to what MLA was, and didn’t understand why I was expected to use this format to type up a simple essay for discussions. I hope by the end of this blog day, you can get a better understanding of the practice and incorporate the skill into anything you come to write. One point I will make is that writing has become a struggle to understand in the world of short hand texting, tweeting, and emailing. 
            The first question one may ask is why do we use MLA format? The answer is it makes what you’re writing easy to read and comprehend. MLA format states that text should be in a font that is readable and not seen as decorative. The font recommended for MLA by Purdue University Online Writing Lab “OWL” is “Times New Roman” at 12pt. Font as you can see makes a difference in how well the viewer can read what you have come to write. I like “pretty” writing fonts but I also want the reader to be able to comprehend what I have taken the time to write. Though I wear glasses, and I can appreciate big font size, let’s be honest I don’t want to have to get out my micro lens to read that small text. The standard font size is 12pt when writing in MLA format. Font color should be set to black. (Purdue OWL)
            I tend to use Microsoft Office Word to write prior to posting in discussion threads and emails. Reasoning is that when you write directly into a classroom discussion box, the default formatting has no spacing between lines. At times this can be hard to read as you may lose track to what line to read next when text is this close. The recommendation is to double space the text and to set the page margins to 1” for the top, bottom, left and right sides. In addition Microsoft Word has a great tool that identifies grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors. The text in this paragraph is not set correctly to the recommendation. In the next paragraph I will correct the font to double space.
           
Compared to the previous paragraph, the text here should be easier to follow and appear to not be so compressed. Of course with any style of writing, paragraphs should be indented one half-inch or one can simply press the tab key once, to achieve the proper indent. The heading above is correct to MLA format and should be aligned to the left margin with your name, instructor, course title, and date. The assignment title or title of the paper being written will be center aligned on the next line, following the date. Below is an example from Purdue OWL of a paper in MLA format.

(Purdue OWL)

MLA also provides a proper format for citing information and images used in papers that are not of your own making. Plagiarism is not tolerated here at Ai and will result in disciplinary actions. Microsoft Office Word provides a template for MLA citing. You may have noticed above that following one of the paragraphs and the image is the word (Purdue OWL) in a set of parenthesis. The MLA format I have come to learn and use is based from Purdue University Online Writing Lab.

This is a short version to what Purdue University has to offer in regards to writing in MLA format. I do hope you take advantage of the links to visit the OWL and read through the information. I have made the citations above a live hot link that will open in a new tab. MLA format is more than a requirement at Ai, this should be a standard used as we develop our professional careers.

Works Cited


Scoggins, Corina. Gumballs. The Art Institute of Pittsburgh Online.
Purdue OWL, University. Purdue University Online Writing Lab. February 2014 <https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/1/>.


Links to Purdue University OWL videos tutorials

Question of the day: 
Whom would you choose to work with on your next event shoot based on the written response to the ad you posted? 

Applicant One

I have been a photog going on 4yrs. This would be a cool job to have if you selected me to work with you. Plus I like to write and can post the story on my website for my followers to see and that will help you in the business. Call me!
Corina Garcia
555-555-555

Applicant Two

Dear Mrs. Scoggins
I’m writing in response to the ad you have posted in regards to hiring an additional photographer for the upcoming event shoot. I have four years of experience shooting events, and would appreciate this opportunity to work side by side. If selected, I would like to include a written artist statement to coincide with the images for the website. Attached is my digital portfolio of my work. If you have any additional questions or concerns, feel free to contact me. My contact information is below. I thank you for this opportunity and look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
Corina Garcia
555-555-5555
email@email.com